the marine birds feed on krill almost known as shrimp
Whales, seals, and birds, including penguins and skuas travel to Antarctica to feed and to breed.
No birds 'live' in Antarctica. However, some sea birds, including penguins, come to Antarctica's beaches to breed.
Penguins breed on Antarctica's beaches because there are no natural land predators there. Except for other breeding birds, such as skua, which can attack penguin checks and kill them in order to feed their own young.
Tony Soper has written: 'Feed the Birds' 'The bird table book in colour' -- subject(s): Bird attracting 'Antarctica' -- subject(s): Guidebooks, Zoology, Wildlife watching, Antarctica 'Wild Life of the Dart Estuary' 'The Shell book of beachcombing' -- subject(s): Seashore biology, Beachcombing 'Seawatching' 'Oceans of birds' -- subject(s): Sea birds 'Discovering Birds' 'Antarctica Wildlife 5th (Bradt Guides)' 'Everyday birds' -- subject(s): Birds
No birds live in Antarctica. Sea birds, including penguins, skuas, petrels and more, breed on Antarctica's beaches during breeding season.
No birds 'live' in Antarctica. Some types of birds, notably penguins, come to Antarctica's beaches to breed for a few weeks during spring and summer.
Feed the Birds was created in 1964.
There are no animals that live on the continent of Antarctica. During breeding season, there are carnivorous birds and sea mammals that consume unprotected baby sea birds, to survive and to feed to their young. All these animals come to Antarctica's beaches to breed. This is one form of 'cooperation', you might say.
You may be thinking of terns, albatross, skua or penguins, all of which are sea birds that feed in the Southern Ocean.
No birds live in Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain there. Sea birds, such as penguins, skuas, terns and more, breed on Antarctica's beaches, and then return to their homes at sea.
No birds are found in Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain. However, some sea birds do breed on Antarctica's beaches, including penguins, terns, albatross and so forth.
Sea birds and sea mammals visit Antarctica's beaches to breed, together with other sea birds. There are no land animals on Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain.